Senator Coburn leaving Congress as he battles cancer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Senator Tom Coburn of
Oklahoma, who crossed the aisle in 2005 and became friends with
a newly elected colleague named Barack Obama, says he will leave
office in December, two years before his term ends. He is
battling cancer.

In a brief statement issued by his office late on Thursday,
Coburn, 65, a medical doctor, said: "This decision isn't about
my health, my prognosis or even my hopes and desires."

Instead, he said: "As a citizen, I am now convinced I can
best serve my own children and grandchildren by shifting my
focus elsewhere. In the meantime, I look forward to finishing
this year strong."

Obama said in a statement on Friday: "Those of us who have
had the privilege of serving with Tom Coburn will be sad to lose
him as a colleague here in Washington."

"Tom and I entered the Senate at the same time, becoming
friends after our wives struck up a conversation," Obama said.

"Though we haven't always agreed politically, we've found
ways to work together," Obama said. "The people of Oklahoma have
been well-served by this 'country doctor from Muskogee.'"

In nine years in the Senate, Coburn earned a reputation as a
blunt-speaking conservative who waged war against federal waste
and denounced what he called a "dysfunctional Washington."

Coburn promised to serve only two terms in the Senate when
first elected to the chamber in 2004. He earlier served six
years in the House of Representatives.

"Our founders saw public service and politics as a calling
rather than a career," Coburn said in his statement on Thursday.
"That's how I saw it when I first ran for office in 1994, and
that's how I still see it today."

Coburn has been treated for prostate cancer. According to
his Senate website, he is a three-time cancer survivor.

A special election to fill Coburn's seat will be held in
Oklahoma. The seat is likely to remain in his party's hands
since the state is staunchly Republican.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, responding to
Coburn's decision to leave the Senate early, hailed him as an
"extraordinary man and a deeply serious lawmaker."

"Tom Coburn is without question one of the most intelligent,
principled, and decent men in modern Senate history," the
Kentucky lawmaker said in a statement.